Guest guest Posted December 27, 2007 Report Share Posted December 27, 2007 I hope this is ok to post here since it IS about thyroid disease...just in cats. My cat (12 years old) is hyperthyroid and has been for a few years. In the last year or so, he's lost A LOT of weight. He eats so much and he's currently maintaining at about 8 lbs. But he used to be 12 lbs (he's a fairly larger than normal cat so 12 lbs was pretty ideal for him) so that's a lot of weight for him to lose. We test his T4 levels fairly often (3 or 4 times a year when I can afford it) and when they were " in range " but he was still vomiting a lot and just acting strangely, my vet consulted with an internist or some such who said we should get his numbers .5 or below. They were somewhere around 2 at that time I believe. So that's what we did. Vomiting stopped and for the most part he seems happy and doesn't look sick, at least his eyes are bright. Exhibiting normal behavior more or less (he's become a crier though - big time). His main problems now though is his weight. He's still extremely thin and his appettite is killing me cost wise. He eats 4-5 times a day at least (and that's with me working 8 hours every day - if I'm home on the weekends all day, he wants to eat every 2 hours). He acts like he's starving to death almost constantly (and I can tell he really is - it's not just typical cat behavior, this is different). He completely refuses dry food now, which is what he ate for 4-5 years before this started, and will only eat canned food now so I can't just leave food out for him 24/7. We just retested him and his T4 is .4. Vet said this is as low as the test will even detect. I thought maybe we should increase his dose a bit more anyways but vet wants to decrease it slightly and retest in a week (but I talked him into a month - I can't afford to do it again next week). His heart rate stays at a pretty fast clip (180-200, I'm told 150 is normal for cats) and this isn't an active cat at all. He sleeps 23 hours of the day. Sometimes he's 150-160 and others it's closer to 200 for no reason I can detect. I'm worried about heart problems as he ages of course due to this. No other tests have been done for thyroid except T4. Is this standard for cats with hyperthyroid? I don't know much at all about hyperthyroidism in humans much less cats. Does anyone have any experience with this in cats and give some advice? Reliable webpages to read? Now that I know how messed up this is in humans, I'm not sure what to trust as far as cats go. My other cat has ballooned because of 's increased eating habits. I've tried to feed them separately but then she refuses to eat at all until he comes out of the room (which actually, would probably be a good thing for her, at least in the short term *g*). Anyway, thanks in advance if anyone can offer me some advice. Oh and he's on Methamizole .5 mg twice a day. That's his new decreased dose, down from 1 1/2 pills twice a day. Jul Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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